Newspaper Page Text
rUIKAL ULi’ARTMEM
1 *- _ _
■~~ jli, Firm and Garden.
_ , articles for this department.
Vi e
~,1! the writer should accompany
r r-a S
nvror article, not necessarily for pnb
. but a* an evidence of good faith.
_____
The Question Box.
jlsrsof this department of the News I
\ ulertv to ask questions relating to
and' gardening, and replies will be
' a .‘,-ied all whenever it is practicable.
p C .runications also upon all matters per-,
t 0 the same subject are cordially
for this department. Address such
Editor, box 91. Milledgeville, Ga.
SHORT CHAPTBR3
On Vegetable Culture.
the beet.
it 3 table vegetable the beet is very gen
■ilyappreciated—no other rcot perhaps
_ so Either boiled and sliced and
Tf q w nh vinegar and pepper or with
tourer and pepper, it constitutes a dish that
few are inclined to dislike. There are not
Ba[) . gardens from which it is excluded,
0 . its culture is as simple as turnips—in
fc t it is less subject to insects or disease
(tan turnips. Give the beet suitable soil,
sse good seed and cultivate promptly, and a
profitable crop will almost invariably re
iard the cultivator.
Xames of beets have not been multiplied
ic the extent that it has been with most
rtber vegetable plants. Soma forty odd
lilies appear altogether in the American
catalogues, but of these there are many
lyuonyms, but not many really distinct
•arit-ties. We need not name more than
Ibree or four kinds. The eclipse, Bassano,
Dewing’s improved aro all turnip-shaped
uui embrace all the necessary qualities for
garden culture and table use. The latter
mentioned is an unsurpassed variety, and
the one that we usually prefer to all others.
There are white and yellow varieties, if one
should prefer these colors to the red. For
culinary purposes the turnip-shaped kinds
are to be preferred, but now and then some
may prefer the long or half long sorts. The
eelmse Is more globular than any other va
riety, and baß as small a top and as rich a
color'as the Egyptian, another well known
variety, but not equal either to the eclipse
or Du wing.
A clayey soil is not adapted to beets,
though,they may be grown with more or
less success in such soil if it is rich and
careful cultivation given. The best soil is a
rich, sandy loam, the more vegetable matter
in It the better.
CULTIVATION.
When well up the young beet plant can
sta ;d qui e a severe frost, but cold severe
enough to heave the soil the slightest will,
of c urse, immediately destroy them. In
Middle Georgia the first planting is usually
made from Feb. 10 to Feb. 30. Sowings two
or three weeks earlier than this can often
times be made with success, where no severe
weather occurs after the middle of Jan
u ry. As one cannot anticipate the weather
it is not wise to risk the main crop in this
section before February, as very little is
gained by sowing in January while the soil
is very cold. Of course, it is desirable to
get the crop started as early as possible,
and get it established ahead of the grass and
weeds, but February sowings accomplish
this purpose very effectually. The soil
should be thoroughly plowed and pulverized,
and if it needs no manuring lines can be
struck off on the level at two feet. Let the
drill be very shallow, mere lines, and after
covering lightly with rake or other tool run
the roller along the drills. The mere rolling
of the drills will furnish covering enough
for the seed. It is a common error to cover
the seed too deeply. In a small garden
where the cultivation is done exclusively
with hand implements—hand plow, hoe and
rake—the rows need net be further apart
than fifteen or eighteen inches, but in field
culture the distance should be twenty-four
to thirty inches.
Where it is necessary to manure the soil
for the crop of beets, and this necessity gen
erally exists, it is a good plan to have the
furrows laid off in Decern! er or early Jan
uary, and apply any stable manure or com
post in them so that the rains may wash out
partially the manurial elements into the
soil. When ready to sow these furrows
should be run through with a shovel aud
listod on, and afteF leveling somewhat
these ridges so made lay off shallow drills
and roll the seed in.
The tseet requires plenty of nitrogen to
produce large crops, and where the soil
stands in need of it nitrate of soda is the
proper thing to supply it. One hundred
and twenty-five to 150 pounds of it uni
formly broadcasted over one acre as soon as
tie seeds are sown will usually produce
very satifactory results. If the soil also
needs either phosphoric aoid or potash or
both a mixture of materials to supply
these elements should be made with the
nitrate and all applied at once, soon after
the crop is put in. Hoeingand plowing will
put the fertilizer just right where the roots
will need it.
lor an acre this mixture is perhaps equal
to anything that can be applied: Nitrate of
soda, 150 pounds; superphosphate (high
grade). 400 pounds; kainit, 200 pounds.
'ther materials and other formulas can
be used and made, to be sure, that will sup
ply the valuable elements as cheaply as the
one given, but none can be named that are
more readily procurable and of speedier
action than those named.
Enough seed should be sown to insure a
perfect stand, aud as soon as the young
s D ui? re U P a rake or scuffle hoe
snouid be run along the rows on each side
and close up. This will keep the weeds in
cbeck and start the crop off at once. If the
soil is rich or the manuring high a plant can
be left every three or four inches. In faot,
1 tne seed were not sown too thickly, and
r/j * bunches, there will be no
f ,°, r Winning out at all. Where grown
r table use it is not desirable to have the
beet- get very large. A beet the size of an
unary tea cup is the most desirable for
'f r ‘S purposes, and by taking them out
. | , as they get large enough, the rest can
“to grow on to the proper size, and
ire b tae s . eaßon for some eight or ten
**• An immense yield of beets can be
l„ a hy this plan. Beets can be sown
Jz 1. C °W frames in December or January,
j transplanted to the open ground early
in February, if one is near enough to a
good market to warrant the trouble of so
aom f- Much earlier beets can thus be se
cured.
*or many years it has been a practice
■"nth the writer of growing a crop of
radishes along with the beets, and in the
same row, and as much for the purpose of
aiding the cultivation of the beet crop as
for the radishes themselves. After sowing
the beets radish seed was also drilled thinly
along in the same furrow. These come up
worv promptly and mark the rows and en
, * the cultivator to hoe or harrow the
land even before the beets are well up, and
without danger of hurting the young beet
plants. x n r i c v, so ip where there is an
abundance of weed seeds, the latter may
spring up simultaneously with or even be
fore the germiuation of the beet, which are
slow in coming up ordinarily in February.
Ihe radishes can be drawn out as soon as
they are large enough for use, aud leave the
laud to the beets. It is an excellent practioe
on stiff sod or weedy soil, the “French
Breakfast” or the “Long scarlet” radish
eitner may be used-
Trv tDe plan on such soil as described, and
you will very likely adopt it as a practice.
The Uee of Lana Plaster.
Land plaster is the cheapest and most
abundant of all our commercial fertilizers,
and on most lands, and for many crops, it is
the most effective, says the American Cul
tivator. In many parts of the country it is
used extensively by the farmers, where its
true value is appreciated, but in other sec
tions it is to be regretted that its merits are
not properly understood by the farmers.
When land plaster can be bad at first hand
it will pay the farmer to purchase it direct
from the quarry. The two leading varieties
of land plaster are known respectively as
the Cayuga and the Nova Bcotia. Both of
these have their virtues, and, while the one
is black and the other light, there is no
doubt that the question to be decided by
the farmer is one of purity rather than that
of oolor.
Land plaster, called also gypsum, is
abundant in different parts of this country,
and it is sent here from Nova Scotia often
as ballast for the vessels. It can thus be ob
tained very cheaply. The plaster
is a sulphate of lime, sul
phuric acid and water. Soils abounding in
sulphate of lime, which is quite common in
certain sections of the country, would thus
not be much benefitted by an application of
gypsum, while on the contrary those soils
deficient in these mineral elements would be
greatly improved. Likewise a great deal
depends on tha plants, some plants requiring
more of these elements than others for their
proper growth.
Taking the soils first we find that gypsum,
or laud plaster does the greatest amount of
good on soils which are naturally deficient
in mineral elements. In lowland meadow
soils, where the vegetable material com
poses a large part of the soil, land plaster
would perform wonders. Such soils are
naturally crying for mineral elements so
essential to the growth of plants: but on
heavy clay soils, coal, slate or sandstone
gravel the demand for gypsum is not so
great. But gypsum has a peculiar property
about it which makes it beneficial to all
soils independent of its fertilizing qualities.
It is a great absorbent of water and am
monia, which makes it an almost indispen
sable article for soils during dry seasons. It
has the power f storing up the water in
stead of letting it leaeh through and escape,
and during extremely dry seasons it will
hold this moisture in readiness for the plants
to take. In this way land plaster benefits
every kind of soil to which it is applied.
The plants that derive profit from gypsum
include all known to agriculturist, but some
more than others profit by the fertilizer.
Clover stands at the head of the list as one
responding quickly to the application, and
it will often make all the difference between
a good and a bad crop of clover whether the
gypsum has been applied. Gypsum will
thus be found to be the foundation of all
good farming, for the agriculturist that can
grow good crops of clover cannot fail to im
prove his farm and raise good crops of other
plants. Fertilizers need not cost much, for
the crop of clover plowed under will do
more good than artificial fertilizers. One
hundred pounds of laud piaster to the acre,
sown broadcast, will prevent a clover patch
from being burnt up by a dry spell, and 300
pounds spread over the fields beforehand
will give the clover a splendid start, it may
be sown at seeding time, or when
are up, but the former method seems pref
erable, for it will then enable the plants to
get a good catcb. Gypsum is thus made the
foundation of a good crop of clover, and if
the young crop is threatened by a drought
gypsum can come in as a top-dressing.
Even during very severe droughts land
piaster will avert direful calamity in the
clover field if applied early enough.
Next to clover come the other grass, timo
thy, blue grass and alfalfa, all of which are
greatly benefited by an application of land
plaster, either at the time of seeding or later
as a top-dressing. Rye never fails to re
spond quickly to an application of plaster.
The plaster also holds forth its water reser
voirs to these plants as well during dry sea
sons, and it thdb becomes a great prevention
to failure of crops.
Corn is greatly improved by land plaster,
whether it is applied as a top dressing, scat
tered broadcast over the fields at seeding
time, or when placed in the hills. But in
this latter way it will sometimes burn up
the corn or rot it. For this reason if it is
desired to put it in the hills it is better to
wait until the corn is up, and then apply it
around the plants on top of the hills. It
may be used in the same way for potatoes,
and the same rules apply for this crop.
Land plaster does not enter directly into
the composition of plants to any great ex
tent, but it has mechanical and chemical
properties which make it invaluable. It
prepares the vegetable matter already in
the soil for the plants to take up, and in ad
dition absorbs and bolds moisture during
dry seasons. Probably the best use to
which land plaster can be put is to mix
large quantities of it with the stable ma
nure heap. It will make the manure ready
for use iu early spring, and it will be so well
rotted that the heap can be almost pene
trated to the bottom with a shovel. In lo
calities whe e gypsum can be obtained fora
few dollars per ton, this work should not be
neglected, "it will prove a great benefit to
the manure heap, aud convert many farm
ers to a stronger belief in the efficacy of
land plaster.
Give a Variety of Food.
The policy of feeding any animal only
one kind of feed is a great mistake. It is
not possible for them to thrive thus, nor is
this their natural way of feeding. Observe
a cow or horse at pasture. If there is any
variety in the succulent herbage, they avail
themselves of it. Even weeds are not dis
dained between mouthfuls of clover and
grass. In the barnyard in winter a little
bright straw will be greedily eaten by ani
mals whose usual diet is hay. People in
cities who keep a horse or cow, and have to
buy everything they feed, are most apt to
restrict animals and with least excuse. By
using a little forethought they can secure a
variety of feed, and ail will then be eaten,
with less waste than is the case where only
one kind at n time is given. Appetite fails
from lack of a variety in horses and cows,
as it does in men.
Fatten Hogs Barly.
The old way of keeping pigs half-starved,
and then, when new corn comes, piling as
much of it in them as they will eat, is an
extravagant mode of making pork. Pigs
should be always kept thrifty. Then when
they come to corn feeding they will be less
apt to be cloyed. The digestion of young
pigs is not strong enough for corn, one of
the heartiest aud most fattening of all
grains. To keep pigs thrifty, therefore,
they must have plenty of easily digested
food, and such kinds as will most promote
growth. On this they will keep nearly al
ways fat enough to kill. Their pork, how
ever, though tender and sweet, will be some
what soft. For our own use we prefer this
to the harder corn-fed pork that most farm
ers prefer, though the market is generally
higher for pig pork than for the heavier
weights that farmers often strive to at
tain.
Feeding for Eggs.
All who raise poultry for eggs should con
sider the different materials of which an
egg is composed. The shell consists of car
bonate of lime, therefore ground bones and
oyster shells in a great measure supply this
want. The white part or albumen is of
nearly the same nature as gluten, which is a
constituent of most vegetable substances as
well as contained in grain, and by a chem
THE MORNING NEWS: MONDAY, MARCH 30, 1891,
ical proc -s the gluten is readily converted
into albumen; and me yolk or yellow being
composed chiefly of oil or fatty matter it
will be reaidy perceived that scraps of fat
and flesh from the shambles and soap mak
ers’s press ill greatly facilitate the produc
tion of eggs when these are supplied in
moderate quantities. The oil contained in
bran also supplies this requisite.
Now, theref re, with regard to feeding
chickens for the production of eggs, it ap
pears whatever substance contains the most
gluten, especially among vegetables, is best
adapted to be changed by a chemical process
into the albumen or white of the egg: and
for the formation of the yolk, fatty matter
or oily substance. Lard 1* very good, if no
other fats can be had, in the production of
egg, and for tte formation of the snelL I
have alluded to its composition. This is al
most au inexhaustible subject, but I hope I
will be pardoned these few general remarks
on this one point alonei. Egg raising is
profitable when duly attended to, but very
few give the needful care aud attention re
quired.
Feeding for Mlllc.
Agri. Editor: Will you tell me what is
the value of rice flour as a feed ration for
the dairy when compared with corn (feed)
meal. Present price of rice flour 35 cents per
bushel (43 pounds): feed meal, |1 30 per
cwt; wheat bran, $1 40 per owt; cotton
seed meal, $1 15 cart. I use the above in
the following proportions, mixed in a large
bin: Bran, 200 pounds, rice flour, 500
pounds, cotton seed meal, 300 pounds. Of
this mixture I give each cow eight quarts
at night and four in the morning feed,
mixed in their feed tuba with about a peck
of cotton se-A bulla at each feed. (I forgot
to mention the hulls,which we get from the
mills at 10 cent and 15 cent per cwt.) I
have Stewart and take two dairy journals
—Chicago World and American Dairy
man—ail fall into a pit when they come to
rice flour as a dairy feed; they don’t under
stand anything about how it is made or its
value. If you will kindly look over the ra
tion. as made up above, and give me your
opinion on tbe subject 1 will be much
obliged. as lam trying to conduct a dairy
on business principles, and will be thankful
for anv information to be had.
Savannah, Oa. S. P. G.
We have no late analysis of rice flour, and
cannot say exactly what is the content of
albuminoids and carbo-hydrates iu tbe
quality that you are feeding. However, the
rice flour is a carbonaceous food, and a very
appropriate material with which to dilute
the highly nitrogeneous materials—cotton
seed meal and wheat bran. Your letter
very clearly indicates that you have an in-
telligent comprehension of the subject of
feeding cattle, and you are, of course, aware
that in the matter of feed stuffs the closer
we approximate a ratio of 1 to 5% (or 6) of
albuminoids to carbo hydrates, the closer
we come to a proper food for producing
both quality and quantity of milk. The
ration that you are giving, doubtless, ap
proximates this ratio—presuming that your
materials are of normal quality in no ways
adulterated. The cotton seed hulls are of
little value, except as they act as a diluent
of this rich ration. You do not say whether
you supply any good hay. Asa diluent or
“amendment” the hulls are a very valuable
component of food at the price stated. A
very important question is: Have you fed
the above ration long enough to enable you
to determine whether it agrees with your
cows, and do they consume the whole ration
with relish? Are they thriving on it, and is
the return in milk what you think it ought
to be? The manure from cattle fed on this
ration is very fine, and is worth very nearly
what it cost in the food. It is possible that
the above ration has a greater proportion
of nitrogen than a strict economy would
justify. (Could you send us a sample of the
rice flower aud also of the mixture?)
Charcoal for Swine.
The Rural and Stockman has never
found a better preventive or remedy for
diseases of swine than the charcoal powders
which it has so often mentioned. If there
are others"as good we have not seen them.
This journal has given these powders a
great deal of freo advertising because we
have believed them to be good. We have
no interest in them at all. But the swine
breeder and feeder will find that pure char
coal is an excellent thing for swine. It is
absorptive of the gases, and aid to diges
tion, corrective of many conditions that
favor diseaso and we live something of a
blood purifier. The only trouble about it
is that when it is fed to animals to any ex
tent it is apt to produce costiveness. This
can be remedied, however, by giving May
apple root. Some advocate giving rotten
wood and cinders. They are better than
nothing, but charcoal is by all odds the
best. If a lit lo more attention was given to
supplying such things ana our swine should
be more largely fed upon the bone and
muscle forming foods we Bhould have less
swine diseases.
Cotton Tests.
Experiments with seven varieties of cot
ton at the Alabama Experiment Station
during the past’ season gave the following
result:
The Peerless proved the most productive,
yielding 3,t>50 pounds seed cotton per acre,
33 and 1-17 per cent, of which was lint.
The Peterkin yielded 2,212 pounds of seed
cotton, which gave 35% per cent, of lint.
The Southern Hope gave 2,239 pounds
seed cotton per acre, 38% per cent, of which
was lint.
The Truit yielded 2,400 pounds, 32% per
cent, of which was lint.
The Storm Proof 1,170 pounds, 33% per
cent. lint.
In all of these except the Hope and Peter
kin the lint was seven-eighths of an inch in
length. The latter gave a lint of \% inches
in length, while the Hope was 1% niches.
The cotton was planted in checks four by
four feet, and cultivated both ways with the
plow.
Important to Swine Breeders.
According to a bulletin sent out from the
the W isconsin station, feeding bone meal
and hardwood ashes to hogs confined to an
exclusive diet of corn and water gives the
following results:
Where ashes and bone meal were fed the
effect was to save about 130 pounds of corn
or 28 per cent, of the total amount fed in
producing 100 pounds of gain, live weight.
It about redoubled tbe strength of the
brnes and 50 per cent, more ash wash found
in the bones of the hogs getting bone meal
and ashes than of those that did not receive
it.
FISHING IN THB ARCTIC!
Wben the Fish Are Pulled Out They
Instantly Freeze Solid.
From Forest and Stream.
Wherever there is a level field of this
season’s ice inclosed by lines of hummocks
the fish are sure to be plenty. Such a field
as this, about half a mile long, practically
afforded a living to most of the people of the
village duriDg the season of 1883, because
that year the ice was very unfavorable for
sealing, and food was pretty scarce in the
village.
Tbe fishing is carried on mostly by tho
women and children, though ono or two old
men generally go out, and one or two of the
your ger meu. when they cannot go sealing
and food is wanted at the house, will join
tbe fishing party.
Each fisherman is provided with a long
hand led ice-nick, which he frequently leaves
sticking in the snow near the fishing ground;
a long line made of strips of whalebone,
reeled lengthwise on a slender wooden shut
tle aoout eighteen inches long, and provided
with a copper sinker and two pear-shaped
“ jigs” of walrus ivory, armed with barbless
hooks of oopper, and a scoop and dipper
made of reindeer antlers, with a wooden
handle about two fee. long.
Hardly an E qutiuau, and especially no
Esquimau boy, s:irs out of the house iti the
winter without one of these scoops in his
hand. To every party of two or thr.e
there will also be a good-sited hag of seal
skin, generally made oi a piece of an old
kayak cover, for bringing home the fish.
Arriving at the Ashing grounds each pro
ceeds to pick a pole through the ice, which
is about four feet thick, clearing out the
chips with the scoop.
The “jigs” are then let down through the
hole, and enoug.i line unreeled to keep
them just clear of the bottom, where tho
Ash are playing about. The reel is held in
the right hand and serve* as a short rod,
while the scoop is held in the left hand, and
used to keep the hole clear of the scum of
new ice, which, of oaurse, is constantly
forming.
The line is kept in constant motion, jerked
up quickly a short distance, and then al
lowed to drop back, so that the little Ash
that are noting about the white “jigs,”
after the manner of codfish, are hooked
about the jaw or in the belly.
As soon as the fisherman feels a fish on
his hook he catchos up a bight of the line
with bis scoop and another with his reel,
and thus reels up the line on these two
sticks in loose coils until the fish is brought
to the surface, when a skillful t ss throws
him off tho barbless ho >k on the ice, wnere
he gives one convulsive flop and instantly
freezes solid.
The elastic whalebone line is Wrown off
the sticks without tangling, and paid out
through the hole again for another trial. If
Ash are not found plentiful at the first hole
the fisherman shifts his ground until he
"strikes a school.” They are sometimes so
plenty that they may die caught as fast as
they can be hauled up.
One woman will bring in upward of a
bushel of little fish—they are generally
about five or six inches long—from a single
day's fishing. This fishing ia-ts until the
middle of May, when the Ice begins to
soften. A g od many are caught al ug the
shore in November in about a foot of water,
when there are no tide cracks in the ice.
At this season the Esquimaux use a little
rod about two feet long, with a short line
and little ivory squid, at which the fish
bite.
JIEDFORM’S MODE RS BIDING DRESS
I had an aunt, Amelia Jane,
Who taught me when a tender child.
It was a shocking sight to see
A woman who was very wild.
By that she meant an Amazon.
• Who walked, and rode, and even ran,
And dared to row, and swim and skate.
And wear a coat just like a man.
But aunt has sought the family vault.
And time has changed the little child,
Who listened when she cautioned him
Against a woman strong and wild.
He did not heed, he wedded one.
Who had a love for horses rare,
And now, too late, he finds with grief,
That he has wedded a gray inare
-rTeutomc Wrestler.
New York, March 88.—In recalling
some of fashion’s vagaries and contrasting
what is with what was, there is nothing that
so forcibly proves our progress in taste as
the change in the styla of the riding habit.
Whosoever should now get herself up in
the long, flowing skirts and big plumed hats
which were considered the correct thing
some forty years ago, would be such a fig
ure of fun as could be only tolerated on the
burlesque stage. And tho’ there are doubt
less a few pig-headed old fogies who would
swear that the women were in the old days
more beautiful, we who see tho flower of
this Fin du siecle are convinced that not
since woman first mounted her horse has her
attire been so neat, so trim, so thoroughly
adapted to its purpose, as at the present
time.
Of the sketches published to -day, the first
is a habit of English melton, with striped
silk sleeves and vests. A silk cap to match
accompanies this habit.
In this other is given a more conven
tional model of melton, with revers and
cuff of a darker shade of silk. The coat is
exceptionally long in the back, and is
slightly opened to show the shirt and neck
scarf. -
If yon decide, from what you have heard
or read, that you will take Hood’s Sarsapa
rilla, do not be induced to boy any substi
tute instead.—Ad.
Are You Engaged f
And did your ring come from Sternberg’s?
Sternberg is headquarters for fine Wed
ding Eresaat *.—Ad.
I’CARLIXK.
Girls.
rf/' ( v _ y 1 By llki.in Ekin S>TAKtETT, in Tht Forum.
((u. J , “Thousands who are nowin shops
jVol and other organized industries wouid
's''n\ really prefer w ork in homes, if only
— — - y //jA the heavy, grimy, malodorous, ckthes
\ /jJvu destroying work of cooking and laun
/ e *—dering were not requited and expected
I / J Jjf 4 of them.”
y yy Well—if this is true
v * ziDr there’s a good time coming
, -L\ for girls and the mistress
t ‘ are com * n g to know, that
\\
yyy'! your back as well as the
Z/y ' \ clothes in the wash ; the
Z / yr paint on your walls—
* f, v / ’f the sheen of silver—the
lustre of glass and reduces the labor —drudgery —health
breaking—temper and comfort wearing work of washing
and cleaning to almost nothing.
Besides —the girl—the mistress —or both —are better
satisfied with the results. It cleanses —restores original
colors—but hurts nothing, not even delicate skin —
luxurious for bathing—be among the bright ones and
use Pcarline.
K Peddlers and some unscrupulous grocers will tell you
\T ‘ l h>s is as good as” or "the same as Pearline.”
II IV ,\V (A I A.. • IT’S FALSE Pearline is never peddled, and if your
crocer sends you something in place of Pearline, do the honest thing— send it back.
TO* JAMBS PYI.P.. New York.
CJ.OTHIWQ.
EASTER
at
COLL ATS
Come and Look
-A-T TIIE
WHITE
WINDOW
iisr THE
WHITE
HOUSE
149 - Broughton - Street.
FUKNITUKK AND CARI’ETS.
LINDSAY & MORGAN,
165 and 167 Broughton Street.
WEED’S CORNER.
* big drive BABY CARRIAGES
BABY
C "t Prices Common Tapestry.
THIRTYDAYS 8
We Will Sell You a Baby Carriage Twenty-fire Per Cent. Off for 30 Day*. Call Early.
HARDWARE..
HARDWARE,
BAR, BAND AND HOOP IRON,
Wagon Material,
NATAL STORE SUPPLIES
FOR SALK BY
Edward Lovell’s Sons,
155 BROUGHTON AND 138-140
STATE STREET.
faints and oils.
JOHN a. BUTLER*
WHITE LEADS, COLORS, OILS, OI.ASB,
V V VARNISH, ETC.; READY MIXED
PAINTS; RAILROAD. STEAMER AND MILL
SUPPLIES; DOORS, BLINDS AND
BUILDERS' HARDWARE. Sole Ag nt foe
LADD LIME. CALCINED PLASTER. OEMENt
HAIR AND LAND PLASTER
M 6 Oongrae* street and 1W st Julian MM*
Savannah. Georgia.
OIL MILLS.
Cotton Seed Oil Mills.
We are making various sizes, from 5 to
50 tone per (lay capacity. Our mills em
brace all tue modern Improvements In ma
chinery and will give the beat results. We
will erect the mills and turn them overcora*
plete and guarantee their capacity.
Hydraulic Cotton Presses
KI >IPLE, COM PACT and tcit POW
KKPHIi i worked either by Hand or
Steam Power. Not liable to get out of
order, and are very durable.
THEY ARE THE BEST COTTON PRESSES MADE.
The Cardwell Machine Cos.,
RICHMOND, VA.
JEISU AND OYSTERS.
ESTABLISHED 1856.
M. M. Sullivan & Son,
Wholesale Fish and Ojsler Dealers,
150 Bryan Bt. and 152 Bay lane, Savannah, Ga.
Klab outer* for Puula Gordo rood rod Aaro
htw prompt attention.
DANIEL. IIOGAk.
LIGHT
WEIGHTS.
We are daily adding to our
splendid Spring Stock new de
signs in the most fashionable
fabrics, such as
FRENCH SATEENS.
< )ne lot at 25c., selling here
tofore at 35c.
One lot beautiful
FRENCH CHARLIES
At 50c., reduced from 05c.
One lot
CAMELS' HAIR
Dress Goods - ■
At 40c., formerly 50c.
One lot French
ORGANDY
MUSLINS
At 35 and 50c., former price 45
and 00c.
CHINA - SILKS. .
SILK GRENADINES
Seasonable
DRESS GOODS
Of every description.
SPRING
PARASOLS.
DRESS LACES.
ETC. ETC. ETC. \
B. HOGAN.
FUKNISUINO GOODS.
Easter Hats.
NoTßltias 111 Statl
BEADTIFOL NECKWEAR
ALL STYLES. AT
LaFAR’S,
THE MEN’S FURNISHER.
Dunlap’s Fine Light Weight Nas
cimento’s Flexible Hats, Palmetto ■>
Hats, Boys’ Straws in Pl&ck and
White Mackinaw.
Men’s Gloves, Dress Shirts, Un
derwear and Suspenders,
All the Newest Things
in Men’s Wear, at <
LaFAR’S,
HATTER & FURNISHER,
H7 BULL STIAKICX.
MEOICAU
[WfoHs Oil s lift
OssSatfcJH
%oip^tALsoK<|ma|aß^]
OIL? r UfX IJ AH OIP
gEßHAN|lNlHC|lTe;Sp<lspui)<|uidd/.
lIPPMAH BROS., Savannah. G/c.
*- Sole AGENTS in THB U. 3. 3E’
M£L¥9olt
FRIEHO.
I Our Perfection Syringe free with every bottte
l)oea notataln. Prevents Stricture. Cures <3 on
orrheea Hn<l (deel in 1 to 4 days. Ask Druggists
bent to any address for 91.00. HALYDOfI
WHJ. CO.. Lanraater. Oliio. For sale bj
R. A. ROWLINSKI, Broughton and Drayton sta
YOU WEAK MAN!
Seedletilv wcjc! Debility, Atrophy, Impolency,
Fears, Evil Thoughts. Varicocele, Losses,
Slavery to unmanly practices. Nervousness,
Shrunken Organs,—all these are curatiU!
[ I ■ 1 tells the story. Mailed
OUR HEW BOOK]
I and win a Monopoly of Ntcrromo.
KBit HKOH'ALCO., BuUalo. W. Y. You
CANT HOOK HEALTH!
asthma"curedT
§m* Schiffbann’g Asthma Cure to giro
* instant rclu/ in the worst cages; injure* com
fortable sleep; effects cures where all others fail. A
tmal c</nv\ncea the moat skeptical. Price, 50 ct. nd
31,00, of Druggists or by mail. Sample FREE for
ni ■ ■ ■■ and WhUkey HabMn
K-raat faJh u 1 n awl cured at home writh-
BrJ aw Bp®' H M K aSH out pain. Book of par.
Kg HI 3 3OM STB ticulars sent HI lE.
SELff? Mil BSI ”■ B.M WOOLLEY, M.D.
%jgy AUanla.tla. Office 104?, Whitehall St
rpo COUNTT OFFICERS. —Books and Blanks
1 required by county officers for the use of
the courts, or for office use. supplied to order by
the MORNING NEWS PRINTING HOOBE.I
Whitaker street. Savannah.
i 4
5